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I don't buy very much plain steel. PDM is perhaps the best place, but they have a minimum order - either $75 or $150, I forget.
Reno Salvage on 4th St. used to sell *new* steel stock and they were cheaper with much less minimum order if any (cash only). Cheap/no cut charge too. I thought they stopped selling new material, but maybe not. Next I would try Metal Masters in Sparks I guess. Really though, unless it is really heavy I often do McMaster.com or onlinemetals.com. I order quickly, forget about it, and it shows up on my doorstep a couple days later. 6' of 1/8" x 2" hot rolled steel would probably be $6 or $8 each, but shipping may suck. BTW what you are looking for is generally called "flat bar", and generally it doesn't come in gauges. 1/8" is close enough to 10ga (and overkill for what you're doing). Yes, you can get steel "strip" or sheared sheet in 10ga. but I never have in 20+ years. |
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1/8" is plenty easy to weld.
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The guys at Hood Machine tell me that ProtoFab on Glendale will sell steel in small quantities. Check them out, Scott.
http://www.protofabinc.com/ |
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What's the difference between cold rolled and hot rolled flat bar? |
Just use hot rolled.
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http://www.spaco.org/hrvscr.htm
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In general for weldments I use hot-rolled because it's cheaper and more available. Once it is primed and painted it looks fine for most mechanical applications.
I use cold-rolled for general mechanical pieces and some welded parts when I want it to have a decent surface finish (like mounting faces, sliding surfaces, shafts, etc.) without having to machine the whole face. The surface of cold-rolled cleans up nicely with just emery cloth or scotchbrite (or nothing really), whereas the hot-rolled has a rough dark gray crust that requires machining or quite a bit or grinding/sanding to "clean up". The cold-rolled also has pretty good tolerances of flatness, thickness, width, etc. so it can often be used as is without machining even on parts that need some reasonable precision. It is tough to machine the whole face of cold-rolled because the residual stresses for the cold rolling will cause the piece to warp when you machine just one side of it. Machinists usually have to machine both sides (maybe more than once) to get a piece straight/flat again. If something is going to get a lot of surface machining (not just boring, drilling, and tapping) then start with hot-rolled. |
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Scott, did you find the material you were looking for?
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I *finally* went by ProtoFab at lunch today. $100 bought me 6 2"x1/8"x6' flat bar, 6 1"x1"x1/8"x6' angle iron, and 4 1/2"x1/2"x.065x4' square tube. That's about 10 times cheaper than Home Depot. :lol: Now I've got enough stock to build those seat rails and a welder cart.
Looks like I'm welding this weekend! :) |
Weld up a frame for your gaming chair while your at it.
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